WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jan 4, 2010
01/10
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WHUT
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in 2010, it could be inflation. >> stay with us. coming up -- zuma prepares to marry his third wife. we find t how south africans feel about polygamous marriage. and how love and on is experiencing a fashion renaissance. >> bbc has obtained evidence that computer software may have caused the loss of a helicopter and southwestern scotland in 1994. the aircraft -- it found the pilots guilty of gross negligence. >> june 1994, a helicopter crashed. all 29 people on board were killed. it was determined that the helicopter was serviceable and there were the. they found the pilots guilty of gross negligence. now an internal document proves there were no serious concerns and warnings over the engine control computer software. it describes it as positively dangerous, the density of deficiencies is so high that the software is unintelligible. the pilot's control of the engines cannot be assured. this evidence was not included in the original inquiry. at the time of the crash, the test pilot was ordered to stop helping with the air accident in
in 2010, it could be inflation. >> stay with us. coming up -- zuma prepares to marry his third wife. we find t how south africans feel about polygamous marriage. and how love and on is experiencing a fashion renaissance. >> bbc has obtained evidence that computer software may have caused the loss of a helicopter and southwestern scotland in 1994. the aircraft -- it found the pilots guilty of gross negligence. >> june 1994, a helicopter crashed. all 29 people on board were...
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Jan 24, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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it would use the weapons or use them for nuclear back mail or so forth. he was very alarmed about this. he was in the vast majority. saying it was likely to be historically the most significant in the 1960s. actually, probably the most historically significant and worst was john kennedy's decision to escalate the war in vietnam. in part largely to deal with what he saw as the common threat coming from china. and john mccone is the head of the central intelligence agency at the time, unless it is led by an alliance, it is almost inevitable. so the question is what has happened with the china bomb? answer: nothing. they've wasted a certain amount of money. they built bombs, and said from the beginning they would not use them first. they built far fewer than they could. clearly if they wanted to, they could have ha lot more. they hardly even talk about it. in fact, a lot of people don't know that china is the nuclear power. we talk about the olympics, they are building a lot of tv sets. no one says, yeah, they have nukes too. they moseley sat in silos or war
it would use the weapons or use them for nuclear back mail or so forth. he was very alarmed about this. he was in the vast majority. saying it was likely to be historically the most significant in the 1960s. actually, probably the most historically significant and worst was john kennedy's decision to escalate the war in vietnam. in part largely to deal with what he saw as the common threat coming from china. and john mccone is the head of the central intelligence agency at the time, unless it...
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Jan 1, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN
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us anymore. we will probably have to appeal to the president, and we are counting on his support. there are different types of leopards. it was considered that these snow lakes have been extinct, but now, their population is being restored. again, i want to emphasize i urge everyone to voluntarily work in this direction. everyone will be rewarded for this. >> many people in the audience what to ask questions. we have here the upper level. from the defense industry. please introduce yourself and your question. >> i work in the electric department. recently, you said that despite the crisis, we still have great perspectives for the future. our colleagues said that they do have state contracts. we also heard that the defense ministry is going to buy french helicopter carriers and others, so now, basically, we are in a very controversial situation. >> the demonstrated very good parameters. it grew by 3.7%. on the whole, this is quite a good index, but very many problems remain. if you have noticed, w
us anymore. we will probably have to appeal to the president, and we are counting on his support. there are different types of leopards. it was considered that these snow lakes have been extinct, but now, their population is being restored. again, i want to emphasize i urge everyone to voluntarily work in this direction. everyone will be rewarded for this. >> many people in the audience what to ask questions. we have here the upper level. from the defense industry. please introduce...
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Jan 2, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN
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our nuclear shield enables us to solve all the tasks is used to solve. of course, we will be developing a new system. it is normal. the whole world is doing that. it needs to be done in the conventional framework, including taking into account our future accords and agreements with the americans. this is a process that will be continued. our nuclear shield will always be effective and adequate to protect our national interest. >> speaking of the most important and near the international subject, we have to focus on the elections in the ukraine. we have gotten away from the start date. who is our preferred russian candidate? is there one? >> based on -- most of my remarks on the ukrainian subject haverford to the -- subject have referred to the incumbent candidate. ukraine is an independent state where the president will be determined by the nation. i'm confident that the nation is capable of making sense of the political declaration and the political struggle which is under way there. there are a couple of dozen candidates there. i would very much like t
our nuclear shield enables us to solve all the tasks is used to solve. of course, we will be developing a new system. it is normal. the whole world is doing that. it needs to be done in the conventional framework, including taking into account our future accords and agreements with the americans. this is a process that will be continued. our nuclear shield will always be effective and adequate to protect our national interest. >> speaking of the most important and near the international...
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Jan 31, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN
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i used to say, that is fine with me. there are a number who might have a word or two to say about that. i do not imagine that will happen anytime soon, but did these you can vote on this panel. the framers would they invented the u.s. government envisioned the united states congress as the first branch of government, the places where all the issues and pressures and the man decided to come together and be resolved. that did not always work as efficiently as they wanted it to work, but it probably work the way they -- it worked as a crossroads to the political system. i do not know about you on this? and how you feel about your jobs, but when i covered this, and was one of the most interesting jobs i have ever had. we're lucky to have five competent and straightforward members of congress before we began, i want to discuss some issues to. tipper o'neill used to said all politics is local, by which any think he meant no politics in succeed unless the public -- the political leaders closely bonded to the needs and demands o
i used to say, that is fine with me. there are a number who might have a word or two to say about that. i do not imagine that will happen anytime soon, but did these you can vote on this panel. the framers would they invented the u.s. government envisioned the united states congress as the first branch of government, the places where all the issues and pressures and the man decided to come together and be resolved. that did not always work as efficiently as they wanted it to work, but it...
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Jan 29, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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more plain -- pain from unemployment lies ahead of us stand behind us. deep recession and protracted recovery mean lower tax revenues and higher outlays for certain benefit programs. cbo estimates the automatic stabilizers will increase the budget by more than 2 percent gdp of 2010 and 2011. and -- in addition the fiscal stimulus package to increase by roughly 2% by gdp this year and smother about next year. as the economy recovers and automatic stabilizers fadeaway budget deficit will shrink relative to gdp although the deficit remains large under current law and of current law is changed that more quickly changes current policy the amount of government borrowing would be unprecedented in the postwar period a large and persistent imbalance between federal spending and revenue is apparent in the projection over the next 10 years and will be exacerbated a coming decades by the aging population and rising cost of health care. that stems from policy choices over many years. as a result u.s. fiscal policy at an unsustainable path to the extent that cannot be
more plain -- pain from unemployment lies ahead of us stand behind us. deep recession and protracted recovery mean lower tax revenues and higher outlays for certain benefit programs. cbo estimates the automatic stabilizers will increase the budget by more than 2 percent gdp of 2010 and 2011. and -- in addition the fiscal stimulus package to increase by roughly 2% by gdp this year and smother about next year. as the economy recovers and automatic stabilizers fadeaway budget deficit will shrink...
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Jan 26, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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he has made it very clear to those of us serving in his cabinet that he not only wants us to do the best job we possibly can running our own agencies but feels that it is a wasted opportunity if we are not leveraging our assets with our allies the iraq government so there is a lot of very exciting interagency work going on. i work on a very regular basis with everybody from the attorney general to the secretary of education and housing and urban development secretary in ways that really have never happened before. everybody in our agency acknowledges that. while there has always been some talk about this kind of collaborative effort it really has never been systemically approached and it is a commitment that we are making throughout the government. so we have interdepartmental partnerships their interagency council on homelessness which many of you are working on and are familiar with. to the juvenile justice coordinating council which actually meets later today, through various interagency working groups on youths that meet on a regular basis and we are doing what we can to make sure th
he has made it very clear to those of us serving in his cabinet that he not only wants us to do the best job we possibly can running our own agencies but feels that it is a wasted opportunity if we are not leveraging our assets with our allies the iraq government so there is a lot of very exciting interagency work going on. i work on a very regular basis with everybody from the attorney general to the secretary of education and housing and urban development secretary in ways that really have...
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Jan 9, 2010
01/10
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WJLA
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thank you for being with us. one night i said to my husband, come on, we're going to a steakhouse yes, i wear dentures super poligrip seals the denture to your gum and it prevents food from penetrating it was very very comfortable fitting (charlie dullea) super poligrip helps keep out food particles. just a few dabs create a seal that helps keep food particles from getting between dentures and gums to make them more comfortable while you eat. super poligrip lets me be me we've been going to steakhouses ever since (charlie dullea) try super poligrip
thank you for being with us. one night i said to my husband, come on, we're going to a steakhouse yes, i wear dentures super poligrip seals the denture to your gum and it prevents food from penetrating it was very very comfortable fitting (charlie dullea) super poligrip helps keep out food particles. just a few dabs create a seal that helps keep food particles from getting between dentures and gums to make them more comfortable while you eat. super poligrip lets me be me we've been going to...
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Jan 30, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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i was getting confused as to what he was really trying to tell us. because, what he kept doing is saying, well, yes, there is a bit of cooperation here and then there is not cooperation there. and what particularly struck me about the 14th of february, blix report, and this, then had a huge significance in what i tried then to construct as a final way of avoiding the war is on page 26 of his briefing, he deals with the issue of interviews. and he says the -- because he's starting to move on interviews because he's beginning to press on it, they have made a commitment that they'll allow it, but then when he actually comes to the interviews themselves people are very reluctant to do it. >> that is an inherent problem with the regime for the reasons that you have given and we knew that before. >> yes. but it is precisely the reason, therefore, why even if blix had continued the fact is he would never have got the truth out of saddam and the leading people in the regime and the people who did get the truth out of them were the iraq survey group and what
i was getting confused as to what he was really trying to tell us. because, what he kept doing is saying, well, yes, there is a bit of cooperation here and then there is not cooperation there. and what particularly struck me about the 14th of february, blix report, and this, then had a huge significance in what i tried then to construct as a final way of avoiding the war is on page 26 of his briefing, he deals with the issue of interviews. and he says the -- because he's starting to move on...
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Jan 23, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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it would use the weapons or it would use them for nuclear blackmail and so forth. and so john kennedy was very alarmed about this. and he was, you know, in the vast, vast majority saying a nuclear test will be historically the most significant and the worst event of the 1960s. actually, probably the most historically significant event and the worst event of the 1960s was john kennedy's decision to escalate the war in vietnam. in part largely to deal with what he saw as a communist threat coming from china. and the head of the central intelligence agency said unless the chinese threat is meant by a much stronger western alliance, nuclear war is inevitable. i mean, they are really hysterical. what has happened with the chinese bomb? answer, nothing. i mean, they wasted a certain amount of money. they built bombs right from the very beginning they said they would not use them first. they built far, far fewer bombs than they could. they got maybe 100 or something like that. and if they wanted to, they could have a lot more. and they hardly even talk about it. in fact,
it would use the weapons or it would use them for nuclear blackmail and so forth. and so john kennedy was very alarmed about this. and he was, you know, in the vast, vast majority saying a nuclear test will be historically the most significant and the worst event of the 1960s. actually, probably the most historically significant event and the worst event of the 1960s was john kennedy's decision to escalate the war in vietnam. in part largely to deal with what he saw as a communist threat coming...
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Jan 20, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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to use these. google as elaborate strategies for application programming interfaces for most of its services and provides the most superficial access to google books. for a company that thrives on openness and empowerment of users google books is to me a bit of a puzzle. with much fanfare google has recently launched out of internal education what it calls a deliberation front to ensure portability of data and openness. on dataliberation.org which i encourage you to visit these list 25 google project on how to maximize their portability and openness. these are all of the main services at google. it is nowhere to be seen on this site. includes user created data such as the library features not to mention all of the data we have paid for with our tax dollars and tuition. they put their revolutionary first on one side, on the other side, colleagues with a circumscribe group of authors and publishers, through a settlement that few in the academy support. others have done an admirable job explaining the
to use these. google as elaborate strategies for application programming interfaces for most of its services and provides the most superficial access to google books. for a company that thrives on openness and empowerment of users google books is to me a bit of a puzzle. with much fanfare google has recently launched out of internal education what it calls a deliberation front to ensure portability of data and openness. on dataliberation.org which i encourage you to visit these list 25 google...
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Jan 17, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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they used to refer to good use as the palestinians. >> host: they're ready advocates for a jewish homeland. >> guest: they saw the end before anyone saw the end park ave said the only thing that we can do to save a remnant that they saw coming they knew the history of the jews the recent and distant history they saw it coming. they made a deal with the right to -- with the right to transfer the jews of the nazi germany into palestine. how do you do that? that will be impossible because to is running palestine? it is run by the british and under the so-called mandate system which move the league of nations and mandated palestine which was turkish territory before that to be a jewish homeland but there were rules in place. this is important. that the jewish could not enter palestine without $5,000 cash or 1,008 british brought -- pounds this was called the capitalist immigration a certificate. how does a jew we've nazi germany where there are currency restrictions were no one can bring eight reich dmarc data of germany have is that you get into lestin as an a fishbowl currency? -- officials
they used to refer to good use as the palestinians. >> host: they're ready advocates for a jewish homeland. >> guest: they saw the end before anyone saw the end park ave said the only thing that we can do to save a remnant that they saw coming they knew the history of the jews the recent and distant history they saw it coming. they made a deal with the right to -- with the right to transfer the jews of the nazi germany into palestine. how do you do that? that will be impossible...
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Jan 3, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN
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he used a teacher for a couple of years -- but herb stein used to say. he used to be a teacher for a couple of years here. the current projections will account for more than 100% of gdp in if they grow at the same rates within 75 years. that is clearly not something that is going to happen. but we can look to other countries to see what has happened. different countries have dealt with technology growth in different ways. but makes plenty what this number is. the number on the left-hand side is the change in spending on health care as a percentage gdp. u.s.'s at the rate at 7%. in 1980, u.s. health care spending was 9% of gdp. in 2007, of the spending was 17% of gdp. in sweden and denmark, the have not had growth -- they have not had growth, not even 1%. that is sustainable. why them and not the u.s.? this is a scatter diagram changeover timing gdp -- this is a scattered diagram. setothe key is that sweden and denmark started with a very high tax rate in the 1980's. you cannot raise taxes much beyond 42% of the economy. it gets very inefficient. there ar
he used a teacher for a couple of years -- but herb stein used to say. he used to be a teacher for a couple of years here. the current projections will account for more than 100% of gdp in if they grow at the same rates within 75 years. that is clearly not something that is going to happen. but we can look to other countries to see what has happened. different countries have dealt with technology growth in different ways. but makes plenty what this number is. the number on the left-hand side is...
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Jan 17, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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and use this information falsely to claim the holocaust did not exist. but the same people would use the bible or autobiographies or biographies or anything that they had. they are frustrated by the fact that i brought out the truth which is the jews, the zionist rescue the jews. there were transfer agreements and other countries. the potentiality of rescuing millions of jews. millions could have been rescued but ask yourself whether not if the nazis would have been stopped by people running up and down the street with placards. of whether it took something more. the zionist were the only realistic of the time and by the way there was no country. there was no major corporation there was no major organization that did not have firebrand relations move to commercial and diplomatic with the nazis at that time. >> host: your website listed the different books you have talked about whether oil addiction or holocaust so this is not one that you usually talk about. >> guest: right. 300 events per year i talk about ibm, holocaust, oil addiction, the nazi nexus b
and use this information falsely to claim the holocaust did not exist. but the same people would use the bible or autobiographies or biographies or anything that they had. they are frustrated by the fact that i brought out the truth which is the jews, the zionist rescue the jews. there were transfer agreements and other countries. the potentiality of rescuing millions of jews. millions could have been rescued but ask yourself whether not if the nazis would have been stopped by people running up...
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Jan 7, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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which is hopefully of greater use than just this one application but could be used in other situations around the world. there has been some criticism in the vietnamese press and from the vietnamese government about the speed at which this cleanup program has proceeded however my impressions have been that by and large the relationship between the u.s. entities and vietnamese entities are involved in this containment and clean-up activity has been fairly good and fairly successful. moving than to the health care issue then things start getting a little more problematic and a part of the big issue is the act will scope or scale of the issue is really are known. if you look at vietnamese figures, we have already heard the figure of 400,000 deaths attributable to exposure to the agent orange by oxen, the vietnamese themselves, but the figure of 4.8 million people in to get mom that have health or medical problems associated with exposure to dioxin and agent orange, and one recent media reports put that in your estimated cost of dealing with health effects of agent orange dioxin at $30 bil
which is hopefully of greater use than just this one application but could be used in other situations around the world. there has been some criticism in the vietnamese press and from the vietnamese government about the speed at which this cleanup program has proceeded however my impressions have been that by and large the relationship between the u.s. entities and vietnamese entities are involved in this containment and clean-up activity has been fairly good and fairly successful. moving than...
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Jan 14, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN
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when pat robertson makes those comments it reminds me how much religion separate us and allows us to judge people and to justify things instead of lugging them and wanting them to be ok and what -- love bring them and one of them to be ok. he is saying these people are cursed having no idea about these individual people and what their thoughts are and how their relationships might be with god and i believe that is a contradiction to say, i believe in the bible and to love people and not judge them but then immediately is says, they are all cursed. it is disgusting. all i can do is pray for him and people like him. host: like forest, illinois. judah on the republican line. caller: how are you today? host: have you called in the past 30 days? your voice sounds familiar. caller: no, it's been about 32 days. i was raised with you guys -- graduated from columbia university school of journalism. host: yes, you have. this one to make sure it was a month. caller: i know the rules and abide by them. mr. robertson, i am not necessarily pained by that. i think what you have is sort of a combina
when pat robertson makes those comments it reminds me how much religion separate us and allows us to judge people and to justify things instead of lugging them and wanting them to be ok and what -- love bring them and one of them to be ok. he is saying these people are cursed having no idea about these individual people and what their thoughts are and how their relationships might be with god and i believe that is a contradiction to say, i believe in the bible and to love people and not judge...
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Jan 18, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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because when you're using the word "munitions," that really conveys battlefield use. whereas weapons could be anything. it could be long-range weapons. i'm just wondering whether you or members of your team were involved in the discussion of how this 45 minutes was going to be introduced in the drafting. and whether this distinction was one that was understood by your team who mattered? >> well, again, i think one of your earlier witnesses talked about this iconic 45 minutes. and again, it certainly wasn't us who made it iconic. i noted in the butler reported -- i'd forgotten this but the butler committee orote to 60 editors and seniors, journalists to ask whether the government had been seeking to promote this 45 minutes as a major part of the september dossier. and uniformly they said, no, we had not. it wasn't within the discussions -- to be frank, it wasn't that big of a deal. and you may say, well, it was mentioned here and the prime minister mentioned it. that's true. he mentioned lots and lots of different things. he mentioned lots of different arguments. he me
because when you're using the word "munitions," that really conveys battlefield use. whereas weapons could be anything. it could be long-range weapons. i'm just wondering whether you or members of your team were involved in the discussion of how this 45 minutes was going to be introduced in the drafting. and whether this distinction was one that was understood by your team who mattered? >> well, again, i think one of your earlier witnesses talked about this iconic 45 minutes....
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Jan 8, 2010
01/10
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FOXNEWS
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it's not faithful to us. it's not truthful to us. it can't produce for us. it doesn't obey its own laws. it doesn't keep us safe. and it won't leave us alone. it's mortgaging our futures, we know it's raising our taxes. it and it treats all of us, adults and children alike, as if we were babies. what to do? challenge it at every turn. expose the government to your friends and to your foes. educate everyone you know about what you just heard and saw and about what you see and hear every day on the glenn beck program. and return no one to the government who has stolen your freedom. one other thing, the god who gave us life, also gave us freedom. he loves us. praise him from the rooftops.
it's not faithful to us. it's not truthful to us. it can't produce for us. it doesn't obey its own laws. it doesn't keep us safe. and it won't leave us alone. it's mortgaging our futures, we know it's raising our taxes. it and it treats all of us, adults and children alike, as if we were babies. what to do? challenge it at every turn. expose the government to your friends and to your foes. educate everyone you know about what you just heard and saw and about what you see and hear every day on...
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Jan 9, 2010
01/10
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FOXNEWS
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progressives are using it. he hillary clinton says this. >> i prefer the progressives, which has a meaning going to the 20th era. i consider myself a modern progressive. >> glenn: read up. this will make your brain hurt but read it, please. there was nothing really american about progressivism. other than it was really started here. but its roots are from europe, which is weird. because while we were studying with people like woodrow wilson we have to be more like europe, the europens were looking to america. the statue of liberty was not built with motivation to thank america. the motivation of those who built it in france not a tribute to us. it was an encouragement to france to be more like america. you know the painting that now sits in the metropolitan museum of art. this is a copy of this painting of george washington. crossing the delaware. it was painted by an american born german. as an inspiration to encourage germans to be more like americans. while all of that was happening in europe, while they sai
progressives are using it. he hillary clinton says this. >> i prefer the progressives, which has a meaning going to the 20th era. i consider myself a modern progressive. >> glenn: read up. this will make your brain hurt but read it, please. there was nothing really american about progressivism. other than it was really started here. but its roots are from europe, which is weird. because while we were studying with people like woodrow wilson we have to be more like europe, the...
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Jan 5, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN
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to use this issue -- mr. speaker, i saw lots of faces on the benches opposite appalled that this situation should be used to make personal attack on the prime minister. the honorable member on the raised three points that i believe are relevant to this issue. the first in terms of the number of all body scanners. what we need to do know is work with the airline industry to decide how many and where we can locate these scanners. as i said in my statement, we will have the first ready at heathrow within three weeks. there is a limited capacity to manufacture these and that these employees and also get the authority and the agreement of the different airline companies and their input into this. that will become much more widely available. the honorable member also talked of the eu's situation. that was clarified before christmas and there will be no e.u. community issues about the transfer of their permission. it still needs the country's transferring that information to agree about transferring techniques, but
to use this issue -- mr. speaker, i saw lots of faces on the benches opposite appalled that this situation should be used to make personal attack on the prime minister. the honorable member on the raised three points that i believe are relevant to this issue. the first in terms of the number of all body scanners. what we need to do know is work with the airline industry to decide how many and where we can locate these scanners. as i said in my statement, we will have the first ready at heathrow...
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Jan 13, 2010
01/10
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CNN
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well, meteorologist jennifer delgado joins us now in the international weather center for us. what's in the forecast here? that's going to be crucial. >> it looks like we're going to deal with favorable weather. if something like this happened during hurricane season or tropical season, the rainy season, this would be a much worse situation. overall we're looking at quiet weather, and that's great news for the cleanup effort. we want to take you back and give you updated information on the earthquake. of course, it was a magnitude 7.0. this is actually the epicenter right in the mountains. as we widen this view up for us, you can see how close it is to port-au-prince. this is why we see so much damage happen in that area. this is what we call a strike slip fault and that produces that horizontal movement whch. when that happens, you see a lot of damage. this is the problem here. this area is home to 1.5 million people, and this is going to be bad news because a lot of homes are poorly structured. they're not even set up really to deal with the rainy season or a tropical storm
well, meteorologist jennifer delgado joins us now in the international weather center for us. what's in the forecast here? that's going to be crucial. >> it looks like we're going to deal with favorable weather. if something like this happened during hurricane season or tropical season, the rainy season, this would be a much worse situation. overall we're looking at quiet weather, and that's great news for the cleanup effort. we want to take you back and give you updated information on...
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Jan 16, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN
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thank you for standing between us and what washington wants to do to us, to make us a subject people in so many ways. economic, moral. i thank you for standing in the gap between unborn children and their mothers, and for your efforts to keep our freedom of speech which, if washington has its way, would be altered. thank you. >> thank you for your encouragement. and you mentioned the speech issue -- it is a passion of mine. i've co-authored legislation that has passed the house and judiciary committee in the senate that would respect and reporter pause right -- a reporter's right to keep sources confidential. it would prevent any president from bringing back the fairness doctrine at the federal communications commission. [applause] people forget the editorial page in the newspaper is as much part as the front page, and i have been a champion of the news gathering and reporting process. but also, what you hear on talk radio, and i love it, and i used to be in it, that is editorial comment, protected by the first amendment. there are forces in washington, the senator for american -- th
thank you for standing between us and what washington wants to do to us, to make us a subject people in so many ways. economic, moral. i thank you for standing in the gap between unborn children and their mothers, and for your efforts to keep our freedom of speech which, if washington has its way, would be altered. thank you. >> thank you for your encouragement. and you mentioned the speech issue -- it is a passion of mine. i've co-authored legislation that has passed the house and...
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Jan 3, 2010
01/10
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, over use of specialists. the physicians would see the trade offs because they were sharing in the pot of money. is there any evidence that hmos did this? is there any proof that the incentive question can be managed? does it seem like hmos are lauded as having changed things fundamentally? >> i will start off. in the beginning, it appeared the was something great going on with hmos. you went to a building that was an hmo. the marketplace did not favor this. of the growth happened -- all the growth happened in independent practice associations. this is where you are going to a doctor but they are paid in a different way than the fee-for- service patients. that model did not work very well in containing costs. there is no corporate culture to control costs. people seem to favor that. relatively few people stayed with the kaiser. i think the hmo models that people are going to now are not the type that have the corporate culture that led to cost control. if you look at rates of increase in health care costs, hmo
, over use of specialists. the physicians would see the trade offs because they were sharing in the pot of money. is there any evidence that hmos did this? is there any proof that the incentive question can be managed? does it seem like hmos are lauded as having changed things fundamentally? >> i will start off. in the beginning, it appeared the was something great going on with hmos. you went to a building that was an hmo. the marketplace did not favor this. of the growth happened -- all...
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Jan 11, 2010
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for free transcripts or to give us your comments about this program, visit us at q&a.org. episodes are also available as podcasts. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2009] >> coming up "washington journal." public at a report on traffic safety laws after that.
for free transcripts or to give us your comments about this program, visit us at q&a.org. episodes are also available as podcasts. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2009] >> coming up "washington journal." public at a report on traffic safety laws after that.
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Jan 2, 2010
01/10
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we will use that term. they use aristocrat. we used the leaders him. that's endemic to american culture do we still have although not to the same extent. today in pennsylvania, this should give you another example. simon snyder was a self educated man, son of a poor mechanic. he worked his way up to become governor in 180, no no education. i mean, he was autodidact. his lack of -- when his opponents mocked his obscure arguments and called them clod hoppers, that was all he needed. he and his followers that they said well that great. i glad to be a clod hopper in a society clodhopper and use that as a successful campaign. so americans became a think so thoroughly democratic through this whole period that many of the period for the constitution was devoted to fighting means and devices to detain and mitigate that democracy. i think the most important was development of the judiciary. and i have a couple chapters on law and the use of the federalist, greatest federalist achievement, not the federalist two created the constitution, but the party was the cr
we will use that term. they use aristocrat. we used the leaders him. that's endemic to american culture do we still have although not to the same extent. today in pennsylvania, this should give you another example. simon snyder was a self educated man, son of a poor mechanic. he worked his way up to become governor in 180, no no education. i mean, he was autodidact. his lack of -- when his opponents mocked his obscure arguments and called them clod hoppers, that was all he needed. he and his...
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Jan 8, 2010
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the highest rate since they began using the euro in 1999. amy has a report for us live from london. >>it is the same as the united states, but it's a euro record. this is as high as it's gotten. that impacts consume were spending. people are spending much less because of this situation. that threatens the economic recovery here as countries teeter on the edge of recession. there is growth in europe and recovery, but a lot of that has been because companies cut jobs, they cut costs and laid people off. the recently released november figures show the average unemployment at 10%. but they have a wide range of statistics. so you can see it's quite varied. but these figures don't tell the whole story. in spain, the under 25 is at a whopping 43.8%. france similarly as higher youth unemployment because of shy job security in that country. but as we see in recent times, over the last couple years the youth unemployment situation in france has led to riots. so it is a dangerous situation if you look at it from that perspective. but growth is back. there is concern over the coming months in 2
the highest rate since they began using the euro in 1999. amy has a report for us live from london. >>it is the same as the united states, but it's a euro record. this is as high as it's gotten. that impacts consume were spending. people are spending much less because of this situation. that threatens the economic recovery here as countries teeter on the edge of recession. there is growth in europe and recovery, but a lot of that has been because companies cut jobs, they cut costs and...
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Jan 11, 2010
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for free transcripts or to give us your comments about this program, visit us at q-and- a.org. "q&a" programs are also available as c-span podcasts. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2010] >> coming up, british prime minister gordon ministebrown ane japanese prime minister yukio hatoyama. after that, a look at u.s. national security issues. >> the house is back in session jr. -- january 12. live coverage on c-span. the senate returns on january 20 it. watch live coverage of the senate on c-span2. off the floor, senate and democratic leaders are negotiating with the white house on the health care bill. the senate passed its bill on christmas eve but does not include the public option which is in the house bill. they have to agree on the same version before sending it to the president. there's an aimed to get the final bill before the state of the union address sometime in early february. >> i wish this prime minister had the courage to call this election. i have to say, mr. speaker, what a lot of desperate
for free transcripts or to give us your comments about this program, visit us at q-and- a.org. "q&a" programs are also available as c-span podcasts. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2010] >> coming up, british prime minister gordon ministebrown ane japanese prime minister yukio hatoyama. after that, a look at u.s. national security issues. >> the house is back in session jr. -- january 12. live...
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Jan 26, 2010
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all of us agree with that. we have expressed over and over our sense that the urgency on terrorism has been too low and we have to reject complacency and recognize that we still can see a serious threat. it is not a reason for panic but a reason for a concerted effort. the second observation would make is that we see the determination of the terrorist who would attack the homeland unabated and it reminds us the need for establishing the national counterterrorism center in the first place. we need to support these entities and build them into strong and enduring institutions. it is imperative in our view of the dni be successful in its vital mission it has been asked to undertake for the country. we have been pleased that your committee has initiated this series of hearings on how well intelligence reform has been implemented, and that is exactly the kind of congressional oversight that we call for in the report. there has been a debate within the intelligence community on the state of intelligence reform and th
all of us agree with that. we have expressed over and over our sense that the urgency on terrorism has been too low and we have to reject complacency and recognize that we still can see a serious threat. it is not a reason for panic but a reason for a concerted effort. the second observation would make is that we see the determination of the terrorist who would attack the homeland unabated and it reminds us the need for establishing the national counterterrorism center in the first place. we...
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Jan 19, 2010
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it uses the ambient light in theater. the only drawback is that they can be kind of heavy after four or five hours. it is similar to that on a guy's head. this allows you to use any kind of light on the ground, any gunfire, tracers, anything like that. allows you to see what is going on down the ground. >> deal ever get a chance to interact with people on the ground? >> absolutely. we get rest and recuperation, all we will come back here to baraki barak -- bagram. we can get feedback and get help to do it better next time. it is very rewarding. >> sometimes we just search location and it is slow pace. and then other times things picked up. it is five hours of boredom and 5 minutes of terror, i guess you could say. our guys were looking at a location and there are taking small arms fire from the hills. they are trying to get out of those locations to not get shot. they had to drop the bomb on a hillside to stop the firing. once the bomb hit, any activity ceased and they are able to get out a bit. it was a very rewarding mi
it uses the ambient light in theater. the only drawback is that they can be kind of heavy after four or five hours. it is similar to that on a guy's head. this allows you to use any kind of light on the ground, any gunfire, tracers, anything like that. allows you to see what is going on down the ground. >> deal ever get a chance to interact with people on the ground? >> absolutely. we get rest and recuperation, all we will come back here to baraki barak -- bagram. we can get...
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Jan 15, 2010
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it is useful for the economy. we have a lot of companies that cannot get money from the banks but the markets. my pension money goes to the bonds issued by the countries. imagine my savings to the companies needed. it does serve a useful purpose. but the utility, or the social good performed by that has receded in importance and a lot of these banks now make more of their money not just by the fees and underwriting the securities but trading them back and forth on their own books and in some senses they are starting to look like gigantic hedge funds. i think in the future you will see a lot less, both because it is a lot more expensive and also governments are trying to discourage it. host: tying it back to this headline, it says that the idea of the proposed tax is a product of six months of policy deliberations by the treasury secretary geithner and his team, which evaluated four competing options. these were, a financial transaction tax -- what you just said it occurs at banks now -- limits of tax deductibility
it is useful for the economy. we have a lot of companies that cannot get money from the banks but the markets. my pension money goes to the bonds issued by the countries. imagine my savings to the companies needed. it does serve a useful purpose. but the utility, or the social good performed by that has receded in importance and a lot of these banks now make more of their money not just by the fees and underwriting the securities but trading them back and forth on their own books and in some...
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Jan 9, 2010
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she can probably find us and track us down. she throws a mean left hook. let me tell you. it is time for messages for greg. kickback and relax. where is the polka music? feast your eyes on some pretty clouds as we bathe your ears with warm, soupy words. >> hi, greg. this is old crow from hot springs, arc ancht new year's resolution, more pab, less shultz. >> i'm wondering why is it that lately he doesn't know what he has been talking about. he is all into it and passionate about it. he was hot and i was thinking i wanted to unbutton his shirt or something, i don't know. is it mind control or something that he is doing because i don't appreciate it. i usually find bill foul and disgusting. last week, watching the reruns, let me know what you think. >> i saw the rerun of yours last night, and it showed a picture of you with a black tank top and a buzz cut. i know it wasn't you because sergeant wrinkle wasn't there. >> andy, would you give a shout out to my cat, steel law, who passed away on july 2nd -- i mean, january 2nd, just two days ago. i'm very sad. i know you are a ca
she can probably find us and track us down. she throws a mean left hook. let me tell you. it is time for messages for greg. kickback and relax. where is the polka music? feast your eyes on some pretty clouds as we bathe your ears with warm, soupy words. >> hi, greg. this is old crow from hot springs, arc ancht new year's resolution, more pab, less shultz. >> i'm wondering why is it that lately he doesn't know what he has been talking about. he is all into it and passionate about it....
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Jan 16, 2010
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us. and i'm afraid that's what we now have in the middle east with the frustrated youth and in some countries with inadequate leadership in terms of bringing the resources of those countries together, as i know in my period of the world bank, this is something that needs to be worked through whether or not there is an israel issue it is a serious issue anyway. and as i said, the split within the arab community, the suni-shia split has within it, i think, also seeds of some difficulty. so i hope very much that my successes and all the people that are training at brookings will come up with much better ideas than my generation had and that this thing can be resolved, and that there will be an arab leadership that is far-seeing and that can bring about a greater balance. >> thank you, jim. we have about 10 minutes or so for some questions. if you have a question, there's a gentleman right over there, please identify yourself and wait for the microphone. >> thank you very much for your remark
us. and i'm afraid that's what we now have in the middle east with the frustrated youth and in some countries with inadequate leadership in terms of bringing the resources of those countries together, as i know in my period of the world bank, this is something that needs to be worked through whether or not there is an israel issue it is a serious issue anyway. and as i said, the split within the arab community, the suni-shia split has within it, i think, also seeds of some difficulty. so i hope...
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Jan 24, 2010
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how to use the informed? it seemed like she was discovering this nomadic tribe, a tribe from some the end of all caved in alaska asking me how do you stay in touch with the real world. that's how i took the question so i kind of, well, i didn't roll my eyes and was annoyed with the question and got, you iow with the state of journalism today is no matter what i say to her it will probably be a twisted and perceived as a bit negative. >> host: anne kornblut, what was happening within the campaign during that moment? >> guest: even that early on she noted heart early in the campaign there were divisions within the mccain campaign it started almost immediately within a couple of weeks after she was picked. she said she was annoyed with the question. politicians have a million questions all the time things they don't think they should have to ask your answer and she was asked at that point with the same was true in some of her debate preparation in getting ready for some of her interviews, some other mccain aides
how to use the informed? it seemed like she was discovering this nomadic tribe, a tribe from some the end of all caved in alaska asking me how do you stay in touch with the real world. that's how i took the question so i kind of, well, i didn't roll my eyes and was annoyed with the question and got, you iow with the state of journalism today is no matter what i say to her it will probably be a twisted and perceived as a bit negative. >> host: anne kornblut, what was happening within the...
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Jan 11, 2010
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for free transcripts or to give us your comments about this program, visit us at q&a.org. episodes are also available as podcasts. >> coming up, prime minister gordon brown out lines british air security measures. then political conversations with a pollster on the 2010 midterm elections and an author on her book. following that, another chance to see q&a with auburn -- o author michael scammell. >> the senate returns on january 28 and will speak of an increase in debt. off the floor, house and senate democratic leaders are discussing the health care bill and the senate passed its bill on christmas eve, but it does not include the public option which is in the house bill. they have to agree on the same version before sending it to the president. the aim is to get a final bill to the president's desk before the state of the union address sometime in early february. >> i am always concerned about the potential, and for seeing consequences of new regulations. new regulations act as a tax. when you regulate something you tend to diminish it. >> robert mcdowell on
for free transcripts or to give us your comments about this program, visit us at q&a.org. episodes are also available as podcasts. >> coming up, prime minister gordon brown out lines british air security measures. then political conversations with a pollster on the 2010 midterm elections and an author on her book. following that, another chance to see q&a with auburn -- o author michael scammell. >> the senate returns on january 28 and will speak of an increase in debt. off...
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Jan 19, 2010
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can you help us understand how this happening. can you help us understand why it happened? and can you help us understand who carried out that? was secretary clinton will also do next week is make an announcement about how the state department is going to sponsor internet freedom initiative, how we can, through a being and betting human rights organizations, internet freedom organizations, health chinese dissidents and other dissidents in iran and north korea and elsewhere gain access to the internet. >> host: wanted to give folks an idea of just some background on google that was founded in 1998 by larry paige and sergey brin and the chairman is eric schmidt also an advisor to president obama. he incorporated in september of 1998. it also has annual revenues of some 5.94 billion. how much of that income comes from their china operations? >> guest: very little. about 1%. they've about 300 million i believe market share in china. that's not that significant. what is significant is that china is now the largest internet market in the world. their 30,060,000,000 internet users
can you help us understand how this happening. can you help us understand why it happened? and can you help us understand who carried out that? was secretary clinton will also do next week is make an announcement about how the state department is going to sponsor internet freedom initiative, how we can, through a being and betting human rights organizations, internet freedom organizations, health chinese dissidents and other dissidents in iran and north korea and elsewhere gain access to the...
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thanks for joining us. what can you tell us about when this happened and how it happened? >> as eun said that jim zorn has been let go, it happened early this morning upon the team's return from san diego. the team landed around 2:00 a.m. and i'm told zorn was packing up his things with team officials waiting for him there at redskins park. so, wha we know from being in san diego with the team last night is that they had scheduled an 11:00 a.m. player availability for this morning. they also have scheduled an 11:30 meeting that players assumed would be zorn's address of the team and then zorn himself was scheduled to have his availability, which he always does at 12:25, which i said is his normal time. it's not expected and likely he'll be back in the building after leaving or if he already left this morning. so, that's the latest. >> lindsay, any idea when we might hear about a new coach for the redskins? >> i think that's the million dollar question. obviously, rumors have been swirling for so long about this. and i wouldn't say that it's out of the realm of possibility
thanks for joining us. what can you tell us about when this happened and how it happened? >> as eun said that jim zorn has been let go, it happened early this morning upon the team's return from san diego. the team landed around 2:00 a.m. and i'm told zorn was packing up his things with team officials waiting for him there at redskins park. so, wha we know from being in san diego with the team last night is that they had scheduled an 11:00 a.m. player availability for this morning. they...
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Jan 7, 2010
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and bruce gave us 60 days. i thank strobe for lending him to us. and we concluded quite simply that america's basic national security interest were at stake in these two countries. this was not enough where the vietnam posed no direct threat to the american homeland. it was not iraq, where saddam hussein had attacks on our countries, including pakistan itself has been planned. the people out there said they would do it again, very clearly, as the near miss on christmas day demonstrates. in fact, this particular person was not trained, and pakistan does not change the fact that the inspiration for all of this comes from al qaeda and al qaeda's leadership is based in the remotest areas on the afghanistan/pakistan border. so we concluded without any dissent that this was a national security issue. we could not walk away from it. the second question was therefore, what do we do about it? the answer has been laid out in a serious of speeches and public states by president obama march 27th and december of last year were the two major statements. but ther
and bruce gave us 60 days. i thank strobe for lending him to us. and we concluded quite simply that america's basic national security interest were at stake in these two countries. this was not enough where the vietnam posed no direct threat to the american homeland. it was not iraq, where saddam hussein had attacks on our countries, including pakistan itself has been planned. the people out there said they would do it again, very clearly, as the near miss on christmas day demonstrates. in...
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Jan 25, 2010
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. >> it was used a lot and it was used by democrats, too. >> not to give credence to when it was used in the past but understand i think we found it remarkable and most people would find remarkable level that has been used on things that ultimately ended up being the ultimate approval of the legislation ended being non- controversial. when you filibuster something does ultimately approved with 88490 boats, what were you filibustering? >> the 60 votes has been around awhile. it has not been invented by republicans. >> no, but it has been used with great regularity in a way that is the unseen before. >> is because the president has not been willing to talk to them and reach across the aisle? >> we can go back and forth on this but what do you think they would say of something that the ultimately voted 488-10? -- voted for a 88-10? >> they're probably not really trying to block it. that's just become standard. >> i think that goes to the gamesmanship that it's played in this tempered people throughout this country are simply tired of watching it. >> president clinton was famous for modes
. >> it was used a lot and it was used by democrats, too. >> not to give credence to when it was used in the past but understand i think we found it remarkable and most people would find remarkable level that has been used on things that ultimately ended up being the ultimate approval of the legislation ended being non- controversial. when you filibuster something does ultimately approved with 88490 boats, what were you filibustering? >> the 60 votes has been around awhile. it...
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Jan 10, 2010
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before the cultural revolution many teachers use the great, use the market as an instrument to call to students in the classroom. during the cultural years. the students were in power to debate the teachers. i learned so much from that format of education. when i first came to the united states, i was working for my masters of history. one of my professors had a class on cultural evolution, and in the class everybody said the cultural revolution was an educational disaster. i was so angered. [laughter] i said okay. i was a product of cultural revolution, right? anyone of you that want to come out, let's have a competition and see who knows more, right? none of them. they are to compete with me. none of them dared to. so that brought about disaster. and there are many challenges with young people grown-up with a perception. but the truth of the matter of the cultural revolution a generation of people like myself, not only in power the books knowledge, but it was a lot of knowledge about society, about the real productive work. and i think china, the reason why china was able to develop
before the cultural revolution many teachers use the great, use the market as an instrument to call to students in the classroom. during the cultural years. the students were in power to debate the teachers. i learned so much from that format of education. when i first came to the united states, i was working for my masters of history. one of my professors had a class on cultural evolution, and in the class everybody said the cultural revolution was an educational disaster. i was so angered....
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Jan 5, 2010
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if you will use that list, then use it. host: fla., on the line. caller: ok, i would like to know -- i'm not trying to be funny, but are you really educated to understand that cuba is on a list because of all the other non-compliance with what the u.s. once? because the u.s. gets what they want. i am a terrorist and all u.s. citizens are terrorists. are you there? guest: i am here. what was pointing to is the political nature of this. i lived in miami for a long time. the administration decided to go the safe route an ad cuba. host: what is the difference between our watch list and a no- fly list? why wouldn't they just put everyone on the watch list on the no-fly list? guest: good question. there has been a lot of examination of exactly what the different lists include. the way the government explains it is that there is a larger data base with 550,000 names on it. and some are aliases. some the government has been talking to about other investigations. from that there is a more narrow list which includes a few thousand who are banned from flying
if you will use that list, then use it. host: fla., on the line. caller: ok, i would like to know -- i'm not trying to be funny, but are you really educated to understand that cuba is on a list because of all the other non-compliance with what the u.s. once? because the u.s. gets what they want. i am a terrorist and all u.s. citizens are terrorists. are you there? guest: i am here. what was pointing to is the political nature of this. i lived in miami for a long time. the administration decided...
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Jan 16, 2010
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they were using the tools. they were using the tools to better connect with them. john mccain now has one of the best or most followed twitter account in the world. he has over $1 million. while he was not doing that and s a presidential candidates, i do not know. i am not saying that if john mccain was using twitter he would be president. i think that would be absurd. i do not think the social media itself will be elected president. when you put the whole package together -- by the way, there is a point about traditional media and ground gaining in the campaign. you cannot just focus on social media because that is the wave of the future at the expense of making the phone calls, going door-to-door. the obama campaign had the whole package. they were still knocking on doors and using facebook. just a quick on why they may be losing some young people. the first part of what i said -- i talked about the tools. there may be some young people who might feel disillusioned now that some of the promises that were made more radical change todd had not been delivered. it
they were using the tools. they were using the tools to better connect with them. john mccain now has one of the best or most followed twitter account in the world. he has over $1 million. while he was not doing that and s a presidential candidates, i do not know. i am not saying that if john mccain was using twitter he would be president. i think that would be absurd. i do not think the social media itself will be elected president. when you put the whole package together -- by the way, there...
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Jan 19, 2010
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us. it led to the toppling of the government, to the resignation of a president, two steps ahead of almost certain impeachment. it put the country into a terrible tailspin and i would submit that we're still not out of that. and it ignited in young journalists the belief that they could automatically become a woodward or a burn stein. so on the one hand the excitement into doing investigative reporting is very good. president overexcitement that you could actually be woodward and burnstein overnight was very destructive. up at the kennedy school we give out a prize every spring time to the best investigative reporting. and i have to tell you that with all of the economic and technological problems now facing newspapers across the country i am always so happy to receive 100, 110, 115 submissions every year. really first-class investigative reporting. first class. and then it becomes extremely difficult for us to have to make a selection as to which one of these is the best. and i always en
us. it led to the toppling of the government, to the resignation of a president, two steps ahead of almost certain impeachment. it put the country into a terrible tailspin and i would submit that we're still not out of that. and it ignited in young journalists the belief that they could automatically become a woodward or a burn stein. so on the one hand the excitement into doing investigative reporting is very good. president overexcitement that you could actually be woodward and burnstein...
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Jan 10, 2010
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they told us they needed three things. one was protective mobility. two was adaptability and three was sit few asian nal awareness on the move. this is a fighting vehicle. it will be infantry fighting vehicle designed to operate from the ground up in an i-80 environment. we don't have anything like that. the -- it needs to have the under belly protection of an m wrap. the side protection of a bradley. the cross country mobility of a bradley and the urban mobility of a striker. >> and you need it to be adaptable so you can put mission packages on it. >> absolutely. that was the second point that they said it has to be adaptability. the enemy will adapt to us. we have to have the ability to adapt. lastly, awareness on the move. they need the network. they need to be connected to understand what is happening around them. so, we are designing a vehicle that builds those three things into it. >>> when do you expect to be able to, you know, shape the requirements and get a competition under way and when do you want to have vehicles on the ramp. >> when i st
they told us they needed three things. one was protective mobility. two was adaptability and three was sit few asian nal awareness on the move. this is a fighting vehicle. it will be infantry fighting vehicle designed to operate from the ground up in an i-80 environment. we don't have anything like that. the -- it needs to have the under belly protection of an m wrap. the side protection of a bradley. the cross country mobility of a bradley and the urban mobility of a striker. >> and you...
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Jan 20, 2010
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host: amy walter also joins us, editor of the hot line. take us to the national phase. what does this race mean? guest: there are a lot of implications for this race. one is that the president's legislative agenda and the senate that no longer has had 60 votes per the other piece is the anger among independent voters. these were the voters that gave president obama his victory in 2008. he won independent voters in a place like massachusetts overwhelmingly in 2008, but he also carry them in places like virginia and new jersey, which went republican for governor this last year. what we are seeing is that independents not only are turning away from democrats but in huge numbers. what is fascinating to me is that we have independent voters in virginia and massachusetts, three very different states of voting by the same margins for a republican candidate, which suggests that for democrats going into 2010, midterm elections, they have got to figure out how to get those voters back into their camp or they are going to suffer significant losses in the election. host: more of yo
host: amy walter also joins us, editor of the hot line. take us to the national phase. what does this race mean? guest: there are a lot of implications for this race. one is that the president's legislative agenda and the senate that no longer has had 60 votes per the other piece is the anger among independent voters. these were the voters that gave president obama his victory in 2008. he won independent voters in a place like massachusetts overwhelmingly in 2008, but he also carry them in...
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Jan 15, 2010
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the only bill that was before us was the one that was before us. you are trying to have it both ways. >> thank you, governor. let's move on and give debra medina an opportunity to ask a question. >> i think texasym is ready for some leadership andç this squabbling is notç getting us anywhere. çgovernor, you were a democrat before you were a republican, having worked for al gore as his campaign manager. you have broken promises on education, securing our border, and property tax reform. you failed to listen to texans on issues like the transgendered texas -- trans-texas quarter. çó>> the republican party was te party i want to be associated with. i am glad i did. i am glad reagan did. i am glad to be part of the party that ronald reagan came to. from the standpoint of putting that i would do everything i could to make this date a place where people were proud to live. i think we have done that. when you look at what we have created over the last eight years, when you look at walking into a budget deficit of $10 billion in 2003, cutting that
the only bill that was before us was the one that was before us. you are trying to have it both ways. >> thank you, governor. let's move on and give debra medina an opportunity to ask a question. >> i think texasym is ready for some leadership andç this squabbling is notç getting us anywhere. çgovernor, you were a democrat before you were a republican, having worked for al gore as his campaign manager. you have broken promises on education, securing our border, and property...
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Jan 2, 2010
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but these challenges do not define us as a people. what has always defined america is its ability to overcome even the most daunting difficulties. so in this new year, we can be filled with new hope and optimism that our greatest challenges will be met, that better days are ahead, and that in these difficult times, we will persevere as we always have, not just for our own individual good, but for the good of all our country and, because we believe that for those to whom much is given, much as expected. some look at washington and wonder how lawmakers who always seem to disagree can ever saw any of our problems. well is true that many of us approached issues differently, at the beginning of a new year is important to remember that we are all united by our love of country and by a common belief that no challenge is too great for the american people to overcome. political disagreements will continue in the years ahead. americans expect and deserve their elected leaders to put country first and work together to solve our common problems.
but these challenges do not define us as a people. what has always defined america is its ability to overcome even the most daunting difficulties. so in this new year, we can be filled with new hope and optimism that our greatest challenges will be met, that better days are ahead, and that in these difficult times, we will persevere as we always have, not just for our own individual good, but for the good of all our country and, because we believe that for those to whom much is given, much as...
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Jan 22, 2010
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they have attacked us and are still attacking us. this administration cannot wish that reality away and i don't think they intend to. the threats cannot be negotiated away. but we must do is acknowledge this reality and work to both interrupt the attacks and destroy the organizations that are at war with us. it is a different kind of war, but a real war nonetheless. in this hearing can help us get insight into the failures that occurred in what we need to do in the future. but until the administration and congress fully knowledge the reality of the enemy, i don't think we'll be fully affect this year to the work of the 9/11 commission unified our nation behind the idea that preventing acts of war by traditional law enforcement type needs would not be affect you. they declared we should treat to danger with a new understanding of war. the sad truth is that the administration tends to view this kind untrimmed conflict of wrongly as a law enforcement under, retrieving and the national decision i thought we reached. now we have a policy
they have attacked us and are still attacking us. this administration cannot wish that reality away and i don't think they intend to. the threats cannot be negotiated away. but we must do is acknowledge this reality and work to both interrupt the attacks and destroy the organizations that are at war with us. it is a different kind of war, but a real war nonetheless. in this hearing can help us get insight into the failures that occurred in what we need to do in the future. but until the...
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Jan 19, 2010
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it knocked us back, but it didn't knock us down. the fact that state revenue is a lagging economic indicator that recovering more slowly than a real
it knocked us back, but it didn't knock us down. the fact that state revenue is a lagging economic indicator that recovering more slowly than a real
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Jan 17, 2010
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thanks for joining us on newsmaker. congressman, let me begin with the hearing that will take place this wednesday in which you will be questioning the former army secretary and the retired admiral on the report that was issued last friday by the state's department -- the defense department. what questions would you have for them? >> this will be based on the briefing my armed services staff received this morning. it appears that there are two disconnects. one disconnect is between the actual performance of the person in question, on the one hand. and the other is between the officers efficiency report and the medical academic report. consequently, people are promoted on what is in writing, and they are moved along in their career path as to what is before the promotion board and the like there is another disconnect -- there is another disconnect that i have surmised between the intelligence reports that evidently came in on the one hand and the superiors of the person or a gentleman or person in question on the other.
thanks for joining us on newsmaker. congressman, let me begin with the hearing that will take place this wednesday in which you will be questioning the former army secretary and the retired admiral on the report that was issued last friday by the state's department -- the defense department. what questions would you have for them? >> this will be based on the briefing my armed services staff received this morning. it appears that there are two disconnects. one disconnect is between the...
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Jan 25, 2010
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us. for stores in areas deborah. deborah does not follow him anywhere. she doesn't go to england when he asks her to come. >> guest: she didn't even go to boston. [laughter] >> host: and she and a very sort of nasty temper and you can almost understand in one aspect of this she lost her own son. his name was frankie therefore he took a dislike to benjamin franklin a legitimate son, william who had been bourn before they married so she really -- where do you think there's a lot to say about franklin's when but in terms of his place as a founding father where does he fit in? where are his women and other historians may not agree he is second only to washington and creating a nation even before the revolution give americans a sense of themselves as a people, but his achievements of france when he went to france in late 76 and became the ambassador without the aid he procured from the fringe the revolution would have collapsed within another year there is no doubt about it because congress wa
us. for stores in areas deborah. deborah does not follow him anywhere. she doesn't go to england when he asks her to come. >> guest: she didn't even go to boston. [laughter] >> host: and she and a very sort of nasty temper and you can almost understand in one aspect of this she lost her own son. his name was frankie therefore he took a dislike to benjamin franklin a legitimate son, william who had been bourn before they married so she really -- where do you think there's a lot to...